Headed up to the Cabela's north of Seattle today just to see what they had in stock. Not one AR style rifle. Most of the magazines for any weapon were sold out. Lots of empty shelves where the pistol ammo should be. They did have a lot of pistols but nobody was looking at them. I picked up two boxes of 9mm range grade ammo since I was there and had $40 in my pocket. They did seem to have a lot of .22 ammo. Thinking I might have to borrow my fathers Colt Woodsman to get some time in at the range.

I've collected/hoarded ammo and guns over the past 4-6 years. I've purchased every single firearm I had on my list except the Scar 16s/17s because my dealer could never get a hold of one. I could've bought it elsewhere but her prices are unbeatable and worth the wait.

Heard on the news here that it will be late spring before they can work on gun control so maybe some restocking will happen. On the other hand if I thought my product was going to be outlawed soon, I might stop manufacturing so I didn't get stuck with them.

Heard on the news here that it will be late spring before they can work on gun control so maybe some restocking will happen. On the other hand if I thought my product was going to be outlawed soon, I might stop manufacturing so I didn't get stuck with them.

Sent by Owl Post

Most mfg are back ordered so they're trying to fill those orders first. If I was a mfg I would be producing around the clock to give the people what they want not only as a service but to throw it the protectionist faces as it should be. As well like most gun items they either retain or increase in value, especially if the government says we're not allowed to have it, Prohibition is a good example.

Just saw on the news a locally-based nationally-reaching sporting goods (read shooting sports) distributor has announced this week they are hiring 80 new employees to add to their current 200. Great news for them, and the small town they are in--and I have to think it is not unrelated to this surge.

The demand for ammunition is pretty obvious, the demand for guns too, but why also the magazines? I can see if you just bought a new rifle then wanting a few mags to work with, but given they are reusable (and should last the lifetime of the gun?) hoarding them seems a bit of an odd idea...

It is also entirely possible there is something very obvious I am missing, being guns ain't exactly a big selling item here.

The demand for ammunition is pretty obvious, the demand for guns too, but why also the magazines? I can see if you just bought a new rifle then wanting a few mags to work with, but given they are reusable (and should last the lifetime of the gun?) hoarding them seems a bit of an odd idea...

It is also entirely possible there is something very obvious I am missing, being guns ain't exactly a big selling item here.

The fear (and probably reality) is that anything holding over 10 rounds will be made illegal. Thus if you find a mag now you buy ... Because you may not be able to do so tomorrow.

Plus ... With the huge surge in gun sales ... Those people also want mags and ammo. It's a double whammy on demand now ... New buyers and hoarding old buyers.

I've collected/hoarded ammo and guns over the past 4-6 years. I've purchased every single firearm I had on my list except the Scar 16s/17s because my dealer could never get a hold of one. I could've bought it elsewhere but her prices are unbeatable and worth the wait.

But if it is made illegal, shouldn't it be illegal to use them, and therefore make all the panic buying obsolete?

The alternative is that if it is illegal to buy, but legal to own, then anyone who actually wants some for nefarious purposes will hardly have a hard time getting hold of some from current owners...

Seems pretty counter productive to me really.

Magazine purchases are not traceable. So just because they are illegal doesn't mean people will give them up. Most will save em for a "rainy day".

If they are made illegal for future manufacturing but are grandfathered so current owners can keep them ... Then yes there will be some out there for purchase second hand ... But at A BIG time premium! And this is exactly why some are hoarding them now ... As much for resale as there own personal use.

It's supply and demand ... The supply will be second hand and limited and any hi cap mag made prior to the ban will be in high demand if what you desire is a hi cap (aka normal size) mag.

I've ordered a few for guns I don't even own but plan on buying because all bets are off in a few months ... I want the normal size mag and I won't be able to get them if banned for future sale.

I've ordered a few for guns I don't even own but plan on buying because all bets are off in a few months ... I want the normal size mag and I won't be able to get them if banned for future sale.

This is the part that gets me: more and more people suggesting they feel something is building. There is mood shift swelling, not over guns per se but on a whole range of politico-economic matters all coming due at one. Never thought I'd actually buy guns until this year.

Stopped by Sportsman's Warehouse today. They still had an "ok" amount of pistol ammo in common calibers, but nothing in .223. Surprisingly, they were almost completely cleaned out of .22LR. They had plenty of full-sized handguns, but almost all of their compact/sub-compacts were gone. Plenty of shotguns and bolt action rifles, but no ARs.

I picked up one of the last boxes of large pistol primers. Saw a guy working with a salesperson to get every component necessary to start reloading. Not a bad idea...